I am on and off the forum, and just now caught wind of the raccoon thread.
In addition to having my minis and other critters, I am also a licensed wildlife rehabilitator. I have been trying my best to educate the public about wild animals, racooons especially, for many years. I am also a writer, and have a series of children's books out, one of which deals with the dangers of raccoons as part of the subplot, in an effort to extend that education to youngsters.
Please do not handle or approach raccoons, or invite them to be near your property. Do all you can do dissuade them. Lock up your grain in metal bins with bungee cords securing them. Keep the feed room and manure/compost areas free of things that might attract them if at all possible. Secure your trash.
Call in a professional, licensed, and vaccinated wildlife officer if you have a problem. If you discover their "latrines," use heavy gloves and masks, and fire or boiling water to deal with the feces. Bury it deep, and make sure none of your other animals can be exposed to it. Bleach does not kill raccoon roundworm (Baylisascaris procyonis). Unless you, yourself, are vaccinated for rabies, you should not be trapping and handling them yourself. And even then, the roundworm risk remains a danger. There is no vaccine against that. Please seek professional assistance if you have a raccoon problem.
In (I'm fairly certain) all states in the US, raccoons are considered a rabies vector species (RVS), and the most dangerous of them, because of their intelligence and ability to get close to human habitation and invade the territory of our pets. Even licensed wildlife rehabbers must have an extra license for RVS to handle the species included in that list in their state, as well as special, separate, and extra secure facilities. For raccoons, those specifications are even more stringent, due not only to the high risk of rabies (I have seen a number of rabid raccoons in upstate NY myself), but due to the very real and dangerous threat of raccoon roundworm.
Raccoons in all areas of the US can carry Baylisascaris. In one California study of tested raccoon latrines, over half of them contained eggs for this parasite. For raccoons, it's just a roundworm, like any other roundworm. But for all other mammal species it is very frequently fatal. (I know of someone who lost a dog to it recently, in fact.) This is because the larvae do not stay in the digestive tract, as they do with the host species. In other mammals, including humans, they migrate to the nervous system and eyes, causing blindness and death. Unless caught very early and treated very aggressively, raccoon roundworm is almost always fatal.
Unless you're a raccoon. Then you just get a belly ache. This, of course, means that infected raccoons can seem perfectly fine, and spread the infection to everyone else without anything slowing them down.
The cute factor of raccoons, babies in particular, makes them one of the most dangerous wildlife species in North America. Raccoons stopped being cute to me the when I began to witness the hell people (and pets) went through due to the zoonotic nature of the diseases they can spread. Post-exposure shots for rabies, for instance, have come a long way in recent times, but they are still very painful, especially for a child.
Please take raccoons seriously. As adorable as they are, and though they certainly don't mean to do so, they have several ways of killing you, your children, and your pets.
Skunks, by the way, are also a rabies vector species in most states.